![]() ![]() Part Two, Section Twelve: How space differs from body in our mode of conceiving it. ![]() Part Two, Section Eleven: How space is not in reality different from corporeal substance.Part Two, Section Four: That the nature of body consists not in weight hardness, colour and the like, but in extension alone.Part One, Section Sixty-four: How these may likewise be distinctly conceived as modes of substance.Part One, Section Sixty-three: How thought and extension may be distinctly known, as constituting, the one the nature of mind, the other that of body.Part One, Section Sixty-two: Of the distinction of reason (conceptual distinction).Part One, Section Sixty-one: Of the modal distinction.Part One, Section Sixty: Of distinctions and first of the real.Part One, Section Fifty-two: That the term is applicable univocally to the mind and the body, and how substance itself is known.Part One, Section Fifty-one: What substance is, and that the term is not applicable to God and the creatures in the same sense.Descartes’ The Principles of Philosophy (1644).Descartes’ Discourse on Method, Part Five (1637). ![]()
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